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A young Iraqi girl injured in Sunday's car bomb blast in the Shiite's Holy
city of Najaf Iraq , sits in a hospital Monday Dec. 20 2004. The bomb blast
during a funeral ceremony Sunday in Najaf killed killed at least 54 people
and wounded 142. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

President Bush smiles while listening to a question during a press conference
on the White House compound in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building,
Monday, Dec. 20, 2004, in Washington. The hour-long question and answer session
focused on problems with the war in Iraq, criticism of Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld, Bush's federal spending plan and prospects for peace in
the Middle East. (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)

** RETRANSMISSION FOR ALTERNATE CROP ** A man, centre, lying down, is killed
while another man walks to execute a second man, seen on his knees on the
right, on Baghdad's Haifa Street , Sunday Dec. 19 2004 . About 30 gunmen
ambushed a car Sunday in central Baghdad carrying employees of the Iraqi
organization running next month's elections, killing three of the workers
while two escaped unhurt, an official from the election body said. Adel al-Lami,
a member of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, said the early
morning attack took place in downtown Haifa Street, a thoroughfare running
through central Baghdad and the scene of repeated clashes between security
forces and insurgents. (AP Photo / Str)

** RECROPPED VERSION ** A gunman, left, shoots and kills a man lying in Baghdad's
Haifa Street after being pulled from a car Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004. The man
at right on his knees was executed moments later, along with another man
not shown in picture. About 30 militants hurling hand grenades and firing
machine guns attacked a car carrying five people employed by the commission's
Baghdad office and tried "to drag them out," said Adel al-Lami, a member
of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq. (AP Photo/Str)

A man, centre, lying down, is killed while another man walks to execute a
second man, seen on his knees on the right, on Baghdad's Haifa Street , Sunday
Dec. 19 2004 . About 30 gunmen ambushed a car Sunday in central Baghdad carrying
employees of the Iraqi organization running next month's elections, killing
three of the workers while two escaped unhurt, an official from the election
body said. Adel al-Lami, a member of the Independent Electoral Commission
of Iraq, said the early morning attack took place in downtown Haifa Street,
a thoroughfare running through central Baghdad and the scene of repeated
clashes between security forces and insurgents. (AP Photo / Str)

A man, centre, lying down, is punched before being killed, while another
man walks to execute a second man, seen on his knees on the right, on Baghdad's
Haifa Street , Sunday Dec. 19 2004 . About 30 gunmen ambushed a car Sunday
in central Baghdad carrying employees of the Iraqi organization running next
month's elections, killing three of the workers while two escaped unhurt,
an official from the election body said. Adel al-Lami, a member of the
Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, said the early morning attack took
place in downtown Haifa Street, a thoroughfare running through central Baghdad
and the scene of repeated clashes between security forces and insurgents.
(AP Photo / Str)

People stand around the body of a man who was killed on Baghdad's Haifa Street,
Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004. About 30 gunmen ambushed a car Sunday in central Baghdad
carrying employees of the Iraqi organization running next month's elections,
killing three of the workers while two escaped unhurt, an official from the
election body said. Adel al-Lami, a member of the Independent Electoral
Commission of Iraq, said the early morning attack took place in downtown
Baghdad's Haifa Street,a thoroughfare running through central Baghdad and
the scene of repeated clashes between security forces and insurgents. (AP
Photo / Str)

Two men lay dead after they were killed on Baghdad's Haifa Street, Sunday,
Dec. 19, 2004. About 30 gunmen ambushed a car Sunday in central Baghdad carrying
employees of the Iraqi organization running next month's elections, killing
three of the workers while two escaped unhurt, an official from the election
body said. Adel al-Lami, a member of the Independent Electoral Commission
of Iraq, said the early morning attack took place in downtown Baghdad's Haifa
Street,a thoroughfare running through central Baghdad and the scene of repeated
clashes between security forces and insurgents. (AP Photo / Str)

Pallbearers carry the flag-draped casket of Marine Cpl. Kyle J. Renehan into
St. Mary's of the Mills church Monday, Dec. 20, 2004, in Laurel, Md. Renehan
was killed by mortar attack in Iraq. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

During an afternoon of sporadic battling with insurgents, U.S. Marines waiting
to advance shelter inside the gateway to a home, one carrying a shoulder-launched
missile, right, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were
on a humanitarian mission to a hospital came under mortar and rocket-propelled
grenade fire from insurgents, who, while fleeing, mounted several more attacks
against the Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

During a two-hour period of sporadic battling with insurgents, U.S. Marines
sprint across a road to cover, one carrying a shoulder-launched missile,
right, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were on a humanitarian
mission to a hospital came under mortar and rocket-propelled grenade fire
from insurgents, who, while fleeing, mounted several more attacks against
the Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

During a two-hour period of sporadic battling with insurgents, a U.S. Marine
aims his rifle down a road, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines
who were on a humanitarian mission to a hospital came under mortar and
rocket-propelled grenade fire from insurgents who, while fleeing, mounted
several more attacks against the advancing Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

After an afternoon of sporadic battling with insurgents, a U.S. Marine officer
and explosives expert approaches an unexploded insurgent rocket-propelled
grenade, which he later blew up from a distance, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday,
Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were on a humanitarian mission to a hospital came
under mortar and rocket-propelled grenade fire from insurgents who, while
fleeing, mounted several more attacks against the advancing Marines. (AP
Photo/Brennan Linsley)

During a two-hour period of sporadic battling with insurgents, a U.S. Marine
runs across a road to cover while another Marine points his rifle down the
road, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were on a humanitarian
mission to a hospital came under mortar and rocket-propelled grenade fire
from insurgents who, while fleeing, mounted several more attacks against
the advancing Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

U.S. Marines advance block by block during an afternoon of sporadic battling
with insurgents, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were
on a humanitarian mission to a hospital came under mortar and rocket-propelled
grenade fire from insurgents who while fleeing mounted several more unsuccessful
attacks against the advancing Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

U.S. Marines examine the tail fins of a mortar which protrudes from the pavement
inside a hospital compound which was shelled by insurgents, in Ramadi, Iraq,
Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. Marines who were on a humanitarian mission to the
hospital came under mortar and rocket-propelled grenade fire from insurgents
who while fleeing mounted several more unsuccessful attacks against the advancing
Marines. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

Former National Guard Sgt. Peter Damon speaks at the site of the groundbreaking
of his new home in Middleboro, Mass. Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004. Damon, who lost
his arms in Iraq, is having his new home built by Homes for our Troops, a
nonprofit organization that builds and renovates homes for soldiers severely
disabled in the line of duty in Iraq. (AP Photo/New Bedford Standard Times,
David W. Oliveira)

President Bush answers questions during a press conference in the Executive
Office Building, Monday, Dec. 20, 2004, in Washington. The hour-long question
and answer session focused on problems with the war in Iraq, criticism of
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Bush's federal spending plan and prospects
for peace in the Middle East. (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)

A man stands amid the debris of houses Monday Dec. 20 2004, which were destroyed
in a powerful explosion Sunday in the Shiite Holy city of Najaf. The Najaf
car bomb which was detonated Sunday in central Maidan Square, where a large
crowd of people had gathered for the funeral procession of a tribal sheik,
killed at least 54 people and wounded 142. (AP Photo / Alla al-Marjani)

Iraqis carry the coffin of a victim of a Sunday's car bomb explosion outside
Imam Ali Shrine in the Shiite Holy city of Najaf Monday Dec. 20 2004. The
Najaf car bomb, which detonated Sunday in central Maidan Square where a large
crowd of people had gathered for the funeral procession of a tribal sheik,
killed at least 54 people and wounded 142. (AP Photo/Alla al-Marjani)

People look at buildings destroyed in Sunday's car bomb blast in the Shiite's
Holy city of Najaf Iraq, Monday Dec. 20 2004. The bomb blast during a funeral
ceremony Sunday in Najaf killed at least 54 people and injured 142. (AP
Photo/Hadi Mizban)

Iraqis crowd into a central square in Najaf, Iraq, Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004,
in this image made from television, after a car bomb exploded during a funeral
procession for a tribal sheikh. This blast followed one about an hour before
in Karbala. (AP Photo/APTN) ** TV OUT **

** FOR USE WITH GEORGIA NEWS END OF YEAR PHOTO PACKAGE AS DESIRED-FILE **
Pati Hensley, center, is escorted by an unidentified family supporter as
she leaves a Memorial service for her husband, Jack Hensley, who was slain
in Ira

A U.S. Marine points his rifle, looking for potential threats, while in the
background Iraqi children holding soccer balls given to them by the Marines
hold out their hands as a Marine gives them sweets, during a patrol, in Ramadi,
Iraq, Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, DEC. 26 **Prof. George Wolfe poses at the Peace Studies
Center at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind., Dec. 17, 2004. Wolfe, who
teaches peace studies, was targeted in a complaint by a student who supported
the war in Iraq and believes Wolfe is anti-American. (AP Photo/Tom Strattman)

Lea Gibbs, 10, is comforted by her uncle, Bret Gibbs, during a graveside
service for her father, Army Sgt. 1st Class Todd Gibbs, Saturday, Dec., 18,
2004, near Grapeland, Texas. Gibbs was killed Dec. 7 in Khalidiyah, Iraq,
when an improvised explosive device blew up while his unit was patrolling
the city. (AP Photo/The Lufkin Daily News, Joel Andrews)

The caisson carrying the casket of Lt. Andrew Shields heads to his burial
site during funeral services at the New Prospect Baptist Church in Inman,
S.C. Saturday, Dec. 18, 2004. Shields, of Campobello, was killed in Mosul,
Iraq when two helicopters accidentally collided Dec. 9, 2004. (AP
Photo/Spartanburg Herald Journal, Gerry Pate)

Lance Cpl. Franklin A. Sweger, from San Antonio, Texas, is shown in this
undated family photo. Sweger, 24, died Thursday, Dec. 16, 2004, as a result
of enemy action in Iraq's Al Anbar Province, the U.S. Defense Department
said. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine
Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Base Hawaii. (AP Photo
family photo via the San Antonio Express-News)

Spc. Craig Nelson, with the Louisiana National Guard, is shown in this undated
photo provided by the Louisiana National Guard. Nelson was injured while
on patrol in Iraq, the Guard announced Friday, Dec. 17, 2004. Nelson, of
Bossier City, was wounded Thursday by an explosive device planted in the
roadway, said Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, a spokesman for the Louisiana Guard.
Nelson is part of the 256th Infantry Brigade, which was sent to Iraq in October.
He was to be transported to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington
for treatment. (AP Photo/Louisiana National Guard, file)

In this photo provided by the U.S Army, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz,
left, shakes hands with Spc. Alexandra Avila of Allentown, Pa. ,after Wolfowitz
addressed several hundred members of the New York Army National Guard's 42nd
Infantry "Rainbow" Division at Fort Drum, N.Y. The soldiers are expected
to reach Iraq early next year. (AP Photo/Steven Frith, Fort Drum photographer)

A policeman walks past graffiti which reads "no to the intervention Yankee
in Iraq and Venezuela," Montevideo, Uruguay, Friday, Dec. 17, 2004. The
commission organizing elections in Iraq extended the deadline for filing
candidates' lists for five days after several parties requested more time
to prepare their slates. (AP Photo/Marcelo Hernandez)

Donna Schermer, right, gives her son, Marine Lance Cpl. Philip Schermer,
a hug as his father, Philip ,wheeled him down the concourse at Mobile Regional
Airport to welcome him home Thursday, Dec. 16, 2004, in Mobile, Ala. Schermer
was injured by a land mine explosion while on patrol in Iraq injuring his
right foot. (AP Photo/Mobile Register, John David Mercer)

U.S. Marines participate in a sweep and patrol operation, in a residential
neighborhood, in Ramadi, Iraq, Friday, Dec. 17, 2004. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

Thousands of people, along with security officials , attend a ceremony for
five Turkish policemen who were killed in a terrorist attack in Mosul, northern
Iraq last week, in Ankara on Monday, Dec. 20, 2004. The five, Turkish embassy
guards, were on their way from Turkey to Baghdad when they were ambushed
in their car. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer Ardell Ball (right) leads his team into a former
agricultural building in Fallujah, Iraq, on Dec. 9, 2004. The Seabees from
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 23 will assess the building for damage.
Ball is a Navy Reserve engineering aid. DoD photo by Petty Officer 1st class
Jeremy L. Wood, U.S. Navy. (Released)

U.S. Marines and Iraqi Armed Forces soldiers clear buildings during Operation
al Fajr (New Dawn) in Fallujah, Iraq, on Dec. 11, 2004. Al Fajr is an offensive
operation to eradicate enemy forces within the city of Fallujah in support
of continuing security and stabilization operations in the Al Anbar province
of Iraq by units of the 1st Marine Division. DoD photo by Lance Cpl. James
J. Vooris, U.S. Marine Corps. (Released)